Parte,  Chap.

 1   I,  TransPre|      was a hard life, a life of poverty, of incessant struggle,
 2   I,  TransPre| prostrated by dejection. As for poverty, it was with him a thing
 3   I,  TransPre|        we owe that dampness and poverty of spirit which has run
 4   I,  TransPre|     even the picturesqueness of poverty; indeed, Don Quixote's own
 5   I,    XXXVII|        to undergo; first of all poverty: not that all are poor,
 6   I,    XXXVII|       have said that he endures poverty, I think nothing more need
 7   I,    XXXVII|       good things of life. This poverty he suffers from in various
 8   I,   XXXVIII|         the student's case with poverty and its accompaniments,
 9   I,   XXXVIII|       and we shall find that in poverty itself there is no one poorer;
10   I,   XXXVIII|       be he will be in the same poverty he was in before, and he
11   I,   XXXVIII|       For what dread of want or poverty that can reach or harass
12   I,     XXXIX|  fortune; though in the general poverty of those communities my
13   I,       XLI|      endures the hardships that poverty brings with it, and the
14   I,      XLII|       were in the boat, and the poverty and distress in which his
15   I,      XLII|    reduced them to the state of poverty you see that you may show
16   I,       LII|    honour, but not the vicious; poverty may cast a cloud over nobility,
17  II,         V|        whether it may have been poverty or low birth, being now
18  II,       XIX|     that make copper seem gold, poverty wealth, and blear eyes pearls."~ ~"
19  II,       XXI|      Basilio die, Basilio whose poverty clipped the wings of his
20  II,      XXII|         object of his love, and poverty and want are the declared
21  II,      XXIV|       replied, "The heat and my poverty are the reason of my travelling
22  II,      XXIV|        that I am bound."~ ~"How poverty?" asked Don Quixote; "the
23  II,      XXIV|        honour, and that such as poverty cannot lessen; especially
24  II,   XXXVIII|        himself reduced to utter poverty; and gifts and graces of
25  II,      XLIV| exclaimed as he was writing, "O poverty, poverty! I know not what
26  II,      XLIV|        was writing, "O poverty, poverty! I know not what could have
27  II,      XLIV| humility, faith, obedience, and poverty; but for all that, I say
28  II,      XLIV|       indeed, it be the kind of poverty one of their greatest saints
29  II,      XLIV|         which is what they call poverty in spirit. But thou, that
30  II,      XLIV|        of the greatest signs of poverty a gentleman can show in
31  II,    XLVIII|         unseasonably reduced to poverty, brought me to the court
32  II,        LX|      contented, for a soldier's poverty does not allow a more extensive
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